Architects and mathematicallygifted tend to have superior right-hemispheric skills but are also more likely to be left handed and suffer higherrates of allergies and immune system problems
Significant relationship between handedness and immune systemdisorders, suggesting the samegeneticprocesses that lead to lateralisation may also affect the immune system development
Language became more lateralised to the left hemisphere with increasing age in children and adolescents, but after 25 lateralisation decreased with each decade of life
Left eye (right hemisphere): Patient could not describe what was shown and often reported nothing was present.
Right eye (left hemisphere): Patient could describe what they saw which shows that language is left dominated.
Findings from Tactile test task
Left eye (right hemisphere): Could not describe what they felt.
Could identify and select an appropriate similar item.
Right eye (left hemisphere): Could describe what they felt
Could identify and select an appropriate similar item because they can HEARthemselves describe it.
Findings from draw what you see task
Left eye (right hemisphere): Left hand could draw clearer pictures despite being right-handed.
Right dominates visual motor tasks.
Right eye (left hemisphere): Right-hand drawings were not as clear as left-hand drawings.
Language may not be restricted to the left hemisphere
Gazzaniga- some of the early discoveries from split-brain research has been disconfirmed by more recent discoveries as damage to the left hemisphere was found to be far more detrimental to language function than the right
Casestudies have demonstrated that this was not necessarily the case- JW developed the capacity to speak out of the righthemisphere with the result that he can now speak about informationpresented to the left or right brain
Challenges the claim that the righthemisphere is unable to handle language
Limitations of split bain research
Andrews- many studies are presented with fewpatients- 3 or 1 single participants
Some cases conclusions have been drawn from individuals who either have a confoundingphysicaldisorder that made the split-brain procedure necessary or have had a less completesectioning of the twohemispheres than was originally believed
Patients who have had this procedure without these confounding variables are rarely encountered- low population validity